Afferent
To the brain
Example: Sensory input
Efferent
Away from the brain
Example: Motor output
Neurons:
Receive, process, and send information
Found in the CNS (brain, spinal cord, retina) and PNS (sensory, motor, autonomic)
Glia:
Support, nourish, and myelinate neighboring neurons
Modulate neurons locally; act as immune cells of the brain
Sensory Neurons:
Receive specific information from the external world via specialized receptors
Send that information to the CNS; Afferent signals
Motor Neurons:
Control movement; directions from brain and body (reflexes)
Efferent signals
Interneurons:
Act locally between neurons in brain and spinal cord
Projection Neurons:
Long-distance communication in brain and spinal cord
Axons:
Send information to downstream neurons
One per neuron, longer, can branch (axon collaterals)
Dendrites:
Receivers of information
One or more per neuron, shorter, heavily branched
Golgi:
Reticular theory; neurites fuse to form a network
Brain does not follow Cell Theory
Cajal:
Neuron doctrine; neurons communicate by direct contact
Cell Theory applies to neurons
Astrocytes:
Influence neurite growth; regulate chemical content of extracellular space
Move nutrients from blood to neurons
Microglia:
Phagocytes; immune function
Respond to damage/neuroinflammation; increase cell excitability
Myelinating Glia:
Oligodendrocytes (CNS) & Schwann cells (PNS); provide electrical insulation on axons
Disease: Multiple Sclerosis = demyelination
Ependymal Cells:
Line the ventricular system; keep CSF flowing
Soma
Dendrites
Axon
Myelin Sheath
Nodes of Ranvier
Presynaptic Terminal
Axon Hillock
Neuronal Membrane
Cytoplasm
Nucleus
Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER)
Smooth ER
Free Ribosomes
Golgi Apparatus
Mitochondria
Synapse: The space/location where two neurons meet
Presynaptic Terminal: Lined with vesicles ready to release neurotransmitters
Synaptic Vesicles: Store neurotransmitters
Synaptic Cleft: Space between pre and post synaptic parts
Postsynaptic Membrane: Receiving side of the synapse; location of neurotransmitter receptors
Equilibrium Potential:
Na+: +62 mV
K+: -80 mV
Cl-: -65 mV
Ca2+: +123 mV
Resting Membrane Potential:
Non-active state of the neuron; typically around -65mV
Vm at rest; no net movement of ions
Active:
Sodium-Potassium Pump: Uses ATP, pumps 3 Na+ out and 2 K+ in
Passive:
Diffusion
Electrostatic Attraction/Repulsion
Calculation: Vm - Eion
No conductance when there are no open channels
EPSP: Depolarizes spike-initiation zone; Na+ enters near axon hillock
Threshold: If EPSPs and IPSPs sum enough to reach threshold
Na+ channels inactivate after 1 msec; Na+ influx halts
K+ flows out rapidly, initiating peak period
Voltage-gated Na+ channels: Closed + De-inactivated
Membrane potential returns to resting potential with the help of Na+/K+ pump
Rising Phase: Voltage-gated Na+ channels open; Na+ flows in rapidly
Falling Phase: Membrane hyperpolarizes with K+ influx
Absolute: Cannot fire another AP; VG Na+ channels inactive
Relative: Could fire with enough stimuli to reach threshold; VG Na+ channels closed but can reopen
Factors affecting conduction:
Membrane Resistance: Fewer channels
Internal Resistance: Bigger diameter
Saltatory Conduction: Potential fades during myelin sheath, but reinvigorates at Nodes of Ranvier
Cocaine, Lidocaine, Novacaine:
Block voltage-gated Na+ channels; prevent Action Potential
Unmyelinated pain axons hardest hit
Large Molecule Neurotransmitters:
Synthesizing & packaging occurs at soma (peptides)
Small Molecule Neurotransmitters:
Synthesizing & packaging at terminal (e.g., GABA, glutamate)
End of Signaling:
Reuptake
Degradation (enzymatic)
Diffusion (out of the cleft)
Ca2+ causes vesicles to move to presynaptic membrane and release neurotransmitter into cleft
Neurotransmitter binds to receptors; triggers signal to postsynaptic neurons (EPSP or IPSP)
Synaptotagmin: Binds Ca2+ for vesicle fusion
SNARE Proteins:
V-SNARE: Synaptobrevin
T-SNARE: Syntaxin and SNAP25
Volume Transfer: Diffusion of lipid-permeable gases like nitric oxide; does not use synaptic vesicles
Useful for affecting other synapses
Electrical Synapses:
Gap Junctions; faster, smaller signals, local effects
Chemical Synapses:
Presynaptic terminal, highly regulated; slower, larger signals, long-range effects
Botulinum Toxin: Blocks ACh release, causes paralysis
Tetanus Toxin: Blocks GABA/Glycine release, causes extreme muscle spasms